// Filename: cachedTypedWritableReferenceCount.I
// Created by:  drose (25Jan05)
//
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
// PANDA 3D SOFTWARE
// Copyright (c) Carnegie Mellon University.  All rights reserved.
//
// All use of this software is subject to the terms of the revised BSD
// license.  You should have received a copy of this license along
// with this source code in a file named "LICENSE."
//
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////


////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//     Function: CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::Constructor
//       Access: Protected
//  Description: The ReferenceCount constructor is protected because
//               you almost never want to create just a ReferenceCount
//               object by itself, and it's probably a mistake if you
//               try.
//
//               ReferenceCount doesn't store any useful information
//               in its own right; its only purpose is to add
//               reference-counting to some other class via
//               inheritance.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
INLINE CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::
CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount() {
  _cache_ref_count = 0;
}

////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//     Function: CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::Copy Constructor
//       Access: Protected
//  Description: The copies of reference-counted objects do not
//               themselves inherit the reference count!
//
//               This copy constructor is protected because you almost
//               never want to create just a ReferenceCount object by
//               itself, and it's probably a mistake if you try.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
INLINE CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::
CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount(const CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount &copy) : TypedWritableReferenceCount(copy) {
  _cache_ref_count = 0;
}

////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//     Function: CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::Copy Assignment Operator
//       Access: Protected
//  Description: The copies of reference-counted objects do not
//               themselves inherit the reference count!
//
//               This copy assignment operator is protected because
//               you almost never want to copy just a ReferenceCount
//               object by itself, and it's probably a mistake if you
//               try.  Instead, this should only be called from a
//               derived class that implements this operator and then
//               calls up the inheritance chain.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
INLINE void CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::
operator = (const CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount &copy) {
  nassertv(this != NULL);

  // If this assertion fails, our own pointer was recently deleted.
  // Possibly you used a real pointer instead of a PointerTo at some
  // point, and the object was deleted when the PointerTo went out of
  // scope.  Maybe you tried to create an automatic (local variable)
  // instance of a class that derives from ReferenceCount.  Or maybe
  // your headers are out of sync, and you need to make clean in
  // direct or some higher tree.
  nassertv(_cache_ref_count != -100);

  TypedWritableReferenceCount::operator = (copy);
}

////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//     Function: CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::Destructor
//       Access: Protected
//  Description: The ReferenceCount destructor is protected to
//               discourage users from accidentally trying to delete a
//               ReferenceCount pointer directly.  This is almost
//               always a bad idea, since the destructor is not
//               virtual, and you've almost certainly got some pointer
//               to something that inherits from ReferenceCount, not
//               just a plain old ReferenceCount object.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
INLINE CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::
~CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount() {
  nassertv(this != NULL);

  // If this assertion fails, we're trying to delete an object that
  // was just deleted.  Possibly you used a real pointer instead of a
  // PointerTo at some point, and the object was deleted when the
  // PointerTo went out of scope.  Maybe you tried to create an
  // automatic (local variable) instance of a class that derives from
  // ReferenceCount.  Or maybe your headers are out of sync, and you
  // need to make clean in direct or some higher tree.
  nassertv(_cache_ref_count != -100);

  // If this assertion fails, the reference counts are all screwed
  // up altogether.  Maybe some errant code stomped all over memory
  // somewhere.
  nassertv(_cache_ref_count >= 0);

  // If this assertion fails, someone tried to delete this object
  // while its reference count was still positive.  Maybe you tried
  // to point a PointerTo at a static object (a local variable,
  // instead of one allocated via new)?  The test below against 0x7f
  // is supposed to check for that, but it's a pretty hokey test.

  // Another possibility is you inadvertently omitted a copy
  // constructor for a ReferenceCount object, and then bitwise
  // copied a dynamically allocated value--reference count and
  // all--onto a locally allocated one.
  nassertv(_cache_ref_count == 0);

#ifndef NDEBUG
  // Ok, all clear to delete.  Now set the reference count to -100,
  // so we'll have a better chance of noticing if we happen to have
  // a stray pointer to it still out there.
  _cache_ref_count = -100;
#endif
}

////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//     Function: CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::get_cache_ref_count
//       Access: Published
//  Description: Returns the current reference count.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
INLINE int CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::
get_cache_ref_count() const {
#ifdef _DEBUG
  test_ref_count_integrity();
#endif
  return AtomicAdjust::get(_cache_ref_count);
}

////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//     Function: CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::cache_ref
//       Access: Published
//  Description: Explicitly increments the cache reference count and
//               the normal reference count simultaneously.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
INLINE void CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::
cache_ref() const {
#ifdef _DEBUG
  nassertv(test_ref_count_integrity());
#endif

  ref();
  AtomicAdjust::inc(((CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount *)this)->_cache_ref_count);
}

////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//     Function: CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::cache_unref
//       Access: Published
//  Description: Explicitly decrements the cache reference count and
//               the normal reference count simultaneously.
//
//               The return value is true if the new reference count
//               is nonzero, false if it is zero.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
INLINE bool CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::
cache_unref() const {
#ifdef _DEBUG
  nassertr(test_ref_count_integrity(), 0);
#endif

  // If this assertion fails, you tried to unref an object with a
  // zero reference count.  Are you using ref() and unref()
  // directly?  Are you sure you can't use PointerTo's?
  nassertr(_cache_ref_count > 0, 0);
  
  AtomicAdjust::dec(((CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount *)this)->_cache_ref_count);
  return ReferenceCount::unref();
}

////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//     Function: CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::test_ref_count_integrity
//       Access: Published
//  Description: Does some easy checks to make sure that the reference
//               count isn't completely bogus.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
INLINE bool CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::
test_ref_count_integrity() const {
#ifndef NDEBUG
  return do_test_ref_count_integrity();
#else
  return true;
#endif
}

////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//     Function: CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::cache_unref_only
//       Access: Protected
//  Description: Decrements the cache reference count without affecting
//               the normal reference count.  Intended to be called by
//               derived classes only, presumably to reimplement
//               cache_unref().
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
INLINE void CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount::
cache_unref_only() const {
#ifdef _DEBUG
  nassertv(test_ref_count_integrity());
#endif

  // If this assertion fails, you tried to unref an object with a
  // zero reference count.  Are you using ref() and unref()
  // directly?  Are you sure you can't use PointerTo's?
  nassertv(_cache_ref_count > 0);
  
  AtomicAdjust::dec(((CachedTypedWritableReferenceCount *)this)->_cache_ref_count);
}

////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//     Function: cache_unref_delete
//  Description: This global helper function will unref the given
//               ReferenceCount object, and if the reference count
//               reaches zero, automatically delete it.  It can't be a
//               member function because it's usually a bad idea to
//               delete an object from within its own member function.
//               It's a template function so the destructor doesn't
//               have to be virtual.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
template<class RefCountType>
INLINE void
cache_unref_delete(RefCountType *ptr) {
  if (!ptr->cache_unref()) {
    delete ptr;
  }
}

